With eyewitness accounts and contemporary reports—linked together by
succinct analytical commentaries—Richard Hofstadter and his young
collaborator, Michael Wallace, have created a superb documentary
reader that is, in effect, a history of violence in America through
four centuries. Here, as experienced by
men and women who lived through them, are not only the familiar,
chilling eruptions—Harper’s Ferry; the Civil War draft riot in New
York; Homestead; Centralia; the Detroit ghetto; the assassinations of
Lincoln, Malcolm X, and Robert Kennedy—but also less commonly
remembered episodes, such as the New York slave riots of 1712, the
doctors’ riot of 1788, vigilante terror in Montana, the anti-Chinese
riot in Los Angeles in 1871, and the White League coup d’état of
1874 in New Orleans. In his extensive
introduction, Richard Hofstadter shows how, in the face of the record,
Americans have had an extraordinary ability to persuade themselves
that they are among the best-behaved and the best-regulated of
peoples. With more than one hundred entries, the editors have
documented and put into perspective the thread of violence in American
history whose rediscovery—as Hofstadter suggests—will undoubtedly
be one of the most important intellectual legacies of the 1960’s.
The book clearly demonstrates, even as the reader comes to grips with
long-eluded truths, that America’s consistent history of violence
has not yet breached beyond hope of restoration our long record of
basic political stability, that most social reforms in the United
States have been brought about without violence.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780307814005
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Random House Digital Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter